Jarhyn
Wizard
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2010
- Messages
- 17,456
- Gender
- Androgyne; they/them
- Basic Beliefs
- Natural Philosophy, Game Theoretic Ethicist
You will both talk past each other trying to justify the value extraction or frame it as unfair, but it's actually a requirement for capitalism. If workers were paid the full value of their labor, there would be no surplus left to reproduce the cycle of production. Assuming there is a surplus leftover after the cycle has been reproduced, some of it would need to go towards taxes, interest on loans, expansion, and other necessary aspects of capitalist production (industrial or otherwise). So, it was never even a possibility for workers not to be exploited under capitalism; you (Jarhyn) recently said you're not anti-capitalist, but you can't have it both ways. No capitalist economy can possibly survive without exploiting the working class, and regulations to limit the scope of exploitation will never eliminate it entirely (and will almost always be reversed or not enforced), since it exists by definition and not because of greed--though greed certainly can exacerbate it. As long as commodities are produced by workers who do not own what they produce or the means of producing it, wages will always fall short of the value embodied in their labor output. Whether you think this is alright as long as they still have a reasonable standard of living, or you think it's an unacceptable and arbitrary constraint on the fabric of society, is a more pressing question than the matter of how high or low wages should be.
Which is a straw-man of my position, and you should know better about me by now. I don't discount that need or value. I merely present a mechanism for fulfilling that need that is not "unending": that when investment is called due by investors in the form of dividends, some fraction of that ownership is lost to labor as a function of net profits extracted: that the extraction of surplus of labor that drives continued investment is limited by regulation by an equitable society.
I understand your motivation. I actually think that it's commendable. You want to help people. I think that ultimately a far more effective way to help people is to increase their safety net, lower the barriers to success. This requires taxes. Actually, most owners used to be workers. If your goal is to increase ownership for workers, a simpler more effective plan would be to lower barriers to ownership. IOW, make startup capital easier to get, increase access to education, lower costs to education, lower regulation/costs to start ESOPs, increase funding to SBA/SBLC's, and etc.
Not all workers are equipped and/or want to be owners. Being an owner often means pledging all your personal assets as collateral. It generally means very long hours, stress, weekends at work. I work 24 hours a day. But again, I support making it easier for more workers to become owners if they have that desire.
You clearly didn't read the meat of the proposal.